Of Mice and Men - dreams
Dreams
George
- Has the dream with Lennie
- Has his own dream of life without Lennie
- Protective of dream
- Brings them hope, especially when Candy offers money
- Allows them to forget about the GD
Quotes
- âLive off the fatta the lanââ
- âGonna get a little placeâ
- âWe was always gonna do it by ourselvesâ
- âIf I was alone I could live so easyâ
- âI think I knowed weâd never do her
Lennie
- Same dream as George
- Lives in fear that George wonât let the dream happen
- Dream brings him comfort, even just before he dies
- Death of Lennie is the death of the dream
Quotes
- âTend the rabbitsâ
- âI done a bad thing. He ainât gonna let me tend no rabbitsâ
- âTell me Georgeâ, âtell meâ
- âTell me againâ - just before his death
Curleyâs wife
- Before she met Curley and came to the ranch, she met a travelling actor
- She wanted to become famous, work in the shows
- Remains optimistic
Quotes
- âI couldâve went to the showsâ
- âMaybe I will yetâ
- Talks of her dream right until her death - death of her dream
Crooks
- Originally didnât believe in the dream
- Later the dream gave him hope of avoiding loneliness and wanted to join them
Quotes
- âNobody gets no landâ
- âA guy needs somebody to be near himâ
- âIf you guys would want a hand to work for nothingâ
Candy
- Wants to join G + L dream - a chance of a better life, gives him hope, sense of purpose
- Offers money - makes the dream possible
- Protective of the dream
- Selfishly concerned more about the dream than Curleyâs Wifeâs death
Quotes
- âHis eyes were wide openâ
- âI ainât much good but I could cook and tend the chickensâ
- âThaâs three hundred anâ fifty bucks Iâd put in
- âWeâre gonna do itâ
- âYou anâ me can get that little place, canât weâŠ.canât weâŠ.canât weâ
- ââThen itâs all off?â Candy asked sulkilyâ
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Context
- American Dream (James Adams 1931) - desire to achieve freedom and happiness through work - most wanted their own land
- The Wall Street Crash (1929), The Great Depression (1930s) - unemployment rose to 30%, people needed some hope during a time of poverty, despair
- The Roaring Twenties - new technology, film (e.g Hollywood films) became more popular
- To A Mouse by Robert Burns - âthe best laid plans of mice and men often go askewâ